CALGARY – Two more liquefied natural gas export projects are poised to proceed in Canada over the next six months, setting up what analysts call “a dream scenario” after years of delays.

Both Pieridae Energy Ltd.’s $10-billion Goldboro LNG project in Nova Scotia and Woodfibre LNG’s $1.6-billion project in British Columbia are nearing the finish line in a tight race to be the second LNG project sanctioned in Canada after Royal Dutch Shell Plc and its partners approved the $40-billion LNG Canada mega project on the West Coast earlier this month.

Pieridae expects to receive its construction permits in Nova Scotia this week and close its merger with Calgary-based natural gas producer Ikkumma Resources Corp. in mid- to late-November, “with our view that we will make our FID shortly after that,” president and CEO Alfred Sorensen told the Financial Post.

The project would mark the first LNG project on Canada’s East Coast and, if built, allow Western Canadian natural gas production to be exported to Europe. Sorensen said the company is currently negotiating a pipeline agreement with TransCanada Corp. to use its existing network, which would need to be expanded.

Woodfibre LNG is nearing a decision that would make it the second LNG project in British Columbia. “We’re looking for a notice to proceed to construction in Q1 (of 2019),” company president David Keane said.

Keane said the company is currently working to finalize an impact-benefits agreement with the Squamish First Nation, looking at ways to reduce the project’s costs and seeking relief on anti-dumping tariffs for fabricated industrial components imported from Asia.

“The federal government has been clear that if you get to a position where you need to make a final investment decision and (tariffs are) the last remaining issue, then they would be willing to take a serious look at it, but they would prefer you exercise all other options, which everybody is doing,” Keane said.The company is awaiting a decision on the tariffs from the Federal Court of Appeal.

If both projects proceed as planned, potentially followed by Pembina Pipeline Corp.’s $6-billion Jordan Cove LNG project in Oregon in the second half of next year, it would present a “dream scenario” for Canadian gas and pipelines, National Bank Financial analyst Patrick Kenny said.

Pembina expects the U.S. Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to issue a final environmental impact statement in August 2019 on its project, followed by a permitting decision in November 2019, which would allow the company to “reach our goal of first cargo in 2024,” company spokesperson Michael Hinrichs said in an email.

That timeline would set up Pembina’s Jordan Cove LNG to be the third export project for Canadian natural gas to proceed between now and the end of next year.

It is less clear when Chevron Corp. and Woodside Petroleum Ltd. might proceed with their jointly owned Kitimat LNG project, Kenny said.

Chevron and Woodside are continuing to work on reducing costs for the project, negotiating agreements with the B.C. and Canadian governments and securing LNG off-take agreements.

“A final investment decision for the proposed Kitimat LNG project will be driven by market demand,” Chevron spokesperson Leif Sollid said in an email. He declined to provide detail on when a decision could be coming.

When Shell, Petroliam Nasional Bhd, PetroChina Co. Ltd., Mitsubishi Corp. and Korea Gas Corp. announced they would fund the LNG Canada project, optimism in the Canadian gas sector – and in the town of Kitimat, B.C. where the project will be built – has skyrocketed.

Kitimat mayor Phil Germuth said the city’s real-estate market got a big boost following the project announcement, with 77 offers reportedly placed on the roughly 90 homes for sale in Kitimat within a week of the LNG Canada announcement.

Canadian gas prices have been hurt by an over-supply of natural gas in Western Canada and pinch points on the system that exports gas to Eastern Canada and the U.S. The Alberta AECO natural gas price traded at US$1.02 per thousand cubic feet on Tuesday, a third of the US$3.28 per mcf price of gas at Henry Hub, a pricing centre in Louisiana.

Meanwhile, the landed price of LNG in Japan was US$10.16 per mcf, according to AltaCorp Capital data.

LNG Canada’s decision has also been cheered by competing companies.

“I think it really is bringing some confidence back to the market place,” Pieridae’s Sorensen said. “I think it gives our project more credibility. If the economics work for one, they work for others.”

The LNG Canada announcement is making it easier for other Canadian proponents to sign off-take agreements with utility companies in other parts of the world, Australia-based LNG Ltd. chief operating officer John Baguley said.

“People look at FID risk. Is this project really going to get built?” said Baguley, whose company has proposed the Bear Head LNG project on Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia. “This helps with the FID risk.”

Baguley said the company is continuing its work on its project and could make a decision to proceed 3.5 years from now, at the end of 2021. “We think we would hit the market at a very good time.”

Wood Mackenzie director, North America gas Dulles Wang said in a release that the recent LNG Canada announcement signalled the return of mega-projects in the global energy industry and a sentiment boost in Canada, where the Pacific NorthWest LNG and Aurora LNG projects were cancelled in 2017.

Looking forward, he said, “We believe 2019 could be the busiest year of LNG FIDs ever.”

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